Honey, I’m off to debate the war again

Just when OxBlog thinks I’m on a roll, I have to go debate the war again. This time the audience will be high school students, and the other participants — Don Wycliff, Eric Zorn, R.C. Longworth, and Marilyn Katz — are mostly affiliated with the Chicago Tribune (Katz is the leader of Chicagoans Against War ...

By , a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast.

Just when OxBlog thinks I'm on a roll, I have to go debate the war again. This time the audience will be high school students, and the other participants -- Don Wycliff, Eric Zorn, R.C. Longworth, and Marilyn Katz -- are mostly affiliated with the Chicago Tribune (Katz is the leader of Chicagoans Against War on Iraq). I'll let you know how it goes. By the way, faithful readers might want to reread this week's posts -- a lot of them have been updated multiple times. UPDATE: I came, I talked, I ate pizza. The high school students -- all of whom belong to Chicago Student Voices -- asked some sharp questions and were exceptionally polite about listening to alternative perspectives. Katz compared Bush to Hitler at one point, but beyond that the discourse was at a high level. The cool part was discovering that some of the Tribune people were reading my blog. Eric Zorn even has a link to here on his web site. The best part came afterwards, when the organizer said, "You know we were worried that you would come off as flat compared with the newspaper people, but you were just as pithy." It's the blog, people!! [Is pithy a good thing for an untenured professor?--ed. Depends on the fora. When presenting an academic paper, it's the kiss of death to be thought of as glib. In front of the larger public, is it good to be glib? Damn straight!]

Just when OxBlog thinks I’m on a roll, I have to go debate the war again. This time the audience will be high school students, and the other participants — Don Wycliff, Eric Zorn, R.C. Longworth, and Marilyn Katz — are mostly affiliated with the Chicago Tribune (Katz is the leader of Chicagoans Against War on Iraq). I’ll let you know how it goes. By the way, faithful readers might want to reread this week’s posts — a lot of them have been updated multiple times. UPDATE: I came, I talked, I ate pizza. The high school students — all of whom belong to Chicago Student Voices — asked some sharp questions and were exceptionally polite about listening to alternative perspectives. Katz compared Bush to Hitler at one point, but beyond that the discourse was at a high level. The cool part was discovering that some of the Tribune people were reading my blog. Eric Zorn even has a link to here on his web site. The best part came afterwards, when the organizer said, “You know we were worried that you would come off as flat compared with the newspaper people, but you were just as pithy.” It’s the blog, people!! [Is pithy a good thing for an untenured professor?–ed. Depends on the fora. When presenting an academic paper, it’s the kiss of death to be thought of as glib. In front of the larger public, is it good to be glib? Damn straight!]

Daniel W. Drezner is a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast. Twitter: @dandrezner

Tag: War

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